Following the recent vote for austerity and subsequent vote of confidence for ruling PM and New IMF Employee-of-the-Year Lucas Papademos by the ruling coalition of center-right New Democracy, center-left PASOK and social conservative LAOS, the three parties began kicking out all members who voted against the measures. As a result, everyone and their mother is starting up their own parties in anticipation of the next election.

At the same time, support for the two major parties, ND and PASOK, is continuing to fall to historic lows: 35% combined for the two in the last opinion poll, compared to 77% in 2009. The same poll projects 9 parties to return to pass the 3% threshold to enter Parliament, and a majority government coalition looks to be near impossible.

Greek election laws state:A party or a coalition of parties elects MPs only if its nationwide tally exceeds 3% of the total valid vote250 of 300 total seats are apportioned proportionallyThe first-past-the post party or coalition receives a 50-seat bonus

This is the current makeup of GovernmentPASOK - 130 seats, centre-left pro-austerity party of former PM Georgios PapandreouNew Democracy - 67 seats, centre-right pro-austerity party

This is the rest of ParliamentKKE - 21 seats, Stalinist anti-austerity partyLAOS - 16 seats, right-wing anti-austerity party which only voted for it as it is "pro-national unity," whatever that meansSYRIZA-Unitary Social Front - 9 seats, anti-capitalist anti-austerity coalitionDemocratic Left - 10 seats, anti-austerity group that voted for it as a "necessary evil," broke away from SYRIZA as they felt the party had moved too far to the left (they now sit between the center-left and far left in their positions)Social Contract - 9 seats, anti-austerity former PASOK members (this party is very similar to PASOK ideologically)Independent Greeks - 9 seats, anti-austerity former ND members (this party is to the right of ND)Democratic Alliance - 4 seats, anti-austerity former ND members (this party is now centrist)There are also 23 independents (this number is constantly in flux)

These are other parties which could possibly enter ParliamentGreens - environmentalist group with no clear position on austerityGolden Dawn - neo-Nazi anti-austerity groupAnticaptialist Left Cooperation for the Overthrow - revolutionary communist anti-austerity group

The last opinion polls, released within the last week, gives us this result:

LAOS has a nationalist faction that would be considered too far right for ND to associate themselves with.

The article is about a recent investigation by Russian intelligence uncovering a plot to assassinate former PM Kostas Karamanlis. Here is a better source of information which I am still reading right now. I'll give a more of a response when I'm done with this.

A new opinion poll was released a few minutes ago incidentally, so I will alter my results shortly to reflect it

EDIT: The results have been updated. This is the most recent opinion poll:

GreecePwns wrote:LAOS has a nationalist faction that would be considered too far right for ND to associate themselves with.

The article is about a recent investigation by Russian intelligence uncovering a plot to assassinate former PM Kostas Karamanlis. Here is a better source of information which I am still reading right now. I'll give a more of a response when I'm done with this.

A new opinion poll was released a few minutes ago incidentally, so I will alter my results shortly to reflect it

EDIT: The results have been updated. This is the most recent opinion poll:

I corrected a mathematical error in that post (I only gave 274 seats due to a typo), but the corrected numbers look no better. None of the projected parties in parliament are likely to partner with ND (not even ND+PASOK is enough).

EDIT: ND + PASOK is possible, actually. So is ND + any other party in the 30s really, but PASOK is the closest one ideologically and the only one which voted for the bailout.

Last edited by GreecePwns on Sat Jan 28, 2012 12:47 am, edited 1 time in total.

Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.

Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.

The problem with this Parliament is that, while the major parties are losing control, no real alternative has emerged. DIMAR has very popular leadership which is why they're looking at a near 10-fold increase in seats. If the left parties want to take advantage of their new found popularity they must run as a single coalition.

Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.

Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.

GreecePwns wrote:A new opinion poll released today has the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn and DISY in Parliament. Here is the seat configuration with 9 parties in Parliament:

ND 125PASOK 36KKE 35SYRIZA 33DIMAR 32LAOS 14Greens 9DISY 8XA 8

The 2 major parties recorded a record low 40.5% of votes in this opinion poll. In the last election in 2009, they had 77.4% of votes.

Under this configuration ND + PASOK is still the only possible coalition government. All others are either impossible or grossly unrealistic.

I was just reading up on the Golden Dawn on WIKIPEDIA. This is an interesting group. Many outfits labeled as fascist are really just traditional conservative groups. But the Golden Dawn appears to, legitimately, be a revolutionary fascist group -- paganism, anti-capitalism, the whole 9 yards.

Yep. And lately they've been infiltrating a few of the ultras groups for our football clubs, which are predominantly leftist/anarchist.

Greek technocrat PM Lucas Papademos announced he has reached a deal for a new austerity package which includes harsh pension cuts. LAOS leader Georgios Karatzaferis, in response (and probably due to the decline of his party's popularity), has announced a likely withdrawal from the government of national unity, leaving only PASOK and ND left in government. The most recent opinion poll has their combined support at just 39 percent now, with Democratic Left growing to a staggering high of 18 percent. This opens either a ND+PASOK or ND+DIMAR coalition in April should poll numbers hold.

(I will update the seat numbers later today)

Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.

Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.

It's too bad Greece did not have a tea party. The message of "less debt, less spending" might have done something to prevent people setting themselves on fire in banks and other suicides, riots, blood in the streets, mass unemployment, food shortages etc etc etc etc.

Scotty, will you continue to ignore the facts and make the Greek economic crisis a spending issue?

The Greek economic crisis was caused by corrupt officials from the federal government down to the local governments purposefully allowing taxpayers to report salaries on average 60 percent less than their real salary, which in turn causes massive government debt. The German and French power grabbers and ignorant fiscal conservatives can blame this on spending all they want and call for the Greek working people to be punished, but it is simply not true.

Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.

Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.

GreecePwns wrote:Scotty, will you continue to ignore the facts and make the Greek economic crisis a spending issue?

The Greek economic crisis was caused by corrupt officials from the federal government down to the local governments purposefully allowing taxpayers to report salaries on average 60 percent less than their real salary, which in turn causes massive government debt. The German and French power grabbers and ignorant fiscal conservatives can blame this on spending all they want and call for the Greek working people to be punished, but it is simply not true.

Right, Greece's debt has nothing to do with it....Greece's credit rating was downgraded because salaries were under-reported.....Greece's interest rates on bonds are sky high and at junk status because people didn't want to pay their fair share of taxes. These are all political talking point and blame game strategies, which, sadly, contribute nothing to solving the problem and actually make it worse. Spending is what gets you into debt. If you have a problem with me calling it spending too much, that's fine, but it doesn't change the problem. Your whole rant reminds me of the bullshit rant here in the USA, that our credit rating was not downgraded because we can't pass a budget, or make interest payments on our debt, or because our debt is over 100% of GDP...no no no we were downgraded because of the language of a few members in the House of Representatives.... x a billion

The Greek people are going to be punished, and it's pretty important to know the reasons why. Greeks do not know the reason why, just what the medi (which is controlled by the same people who got you into this mess) says. If they people had a clue, they would have done something about these problems a long time ago.

spending too much is what got you in debt. Not paying enough in taxes made it worse, of course, but perhaps you guys shouldn't have spent so much that it made your people find ways to get out of taxes that were way too high....not in your opinion, but in their (the over-taxed people) opinion.

To the country of Greece....nice knowing you, but thanks for showing the world a perfect example of what not to do.

This is true at the local/municipality level. Usually what happens is that schools end up having 20 teachers where 7 or 8 are needed, but compared to the tax evasion corruption this is minute (local governments don't do much other than city planning and basic services).

NY Times reports mass expulsions from the three parties in the coalition government as a punishment for not voting for the Franco-German Power Grab austerity bill.

"After the vote, all three of the coalition parties moved swiftly to expel lawmakers who had not voted yes. The Socialists, who governed Greece from 2009 until Mr. Papademos was installed last November, ejected 23 lawmakers from their party; the New Democrats, who are expected to gain seats from the Socialists in the next election, ejected 21, and the Popular Orthodox Rally 2."

Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.

Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.

And what caused the debt? Hint hint: The tax evasion. Not spending. Greece's level of spending as a % of GDP is not much higher than the EU average, 46% as compared to Germany's 43% (the US is at 39%). And France's is 7th highest in the world at 52%. Yet these two are leading the way in calling for the cutting of the minimum wage by 22 percent among other measures.

I've slapped you around on this before, so I will simply state that all informed experts agree Greece would have turned surpluses had the 4-4-2 method not have been in existence. (The 4-4-2 method is a widely-known code in Greece in which 40% of the real tax would go to the government, 40% simply not paid, and 20% in the tax collection official's pocket).

EDIT: Tax experts in Greece say that tax evasion taxes result in about 20 billion euro lost funds for the government. Only in 2008-2010 have government deficits exceeded 20 billion euros (on average by 7 billion/year), but this would have been made up by the massive surpluses from the previous years.

So stop telling me what's going on in my country until you start looking at basic facts. You make a fool out of yourself every time.

Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.

Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.

GreecePwns wrote:The Greek economic crisis was caused by corrupt officials from the federal government down to the local governments purposefully allowing taxpayers to report salaries on average 60 percent less than their real salary, which in turn causes massive government debt...

Couldn't the government have just spent, on average, 60% less and avoided all this trouble?

What does the greek government really need other than grapes and lube anyway?

GreecePwns wrote:The Greek economic crisis was caused by corrupt officials from the federal government down to the local governments purposefully allowing taxpayers to report salaries on average 60 percent less than their real salary, which in turn causes massive government debt...

Couldn't the government have just spent, on average, 60% less and avoided all this trouble?

The only way to solve the problem of tax evasion is by legalizing it?

We're still ignoring the fact that the government would have run surpluses with a clean and proper auditing system, while applauding IMF Employees' of the Year Lucas Papademos (the IMF-installed Prime Minister, I kid you not) and George Papandreou (the leader of a so-called socialist party) for calling for a reduction of the minimum wage to less than $5.50 an hour and the slashing of contracts between unions and the private sector.

Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.

Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.

Government spending is the reason for the taxes, and high taxes are the reason for tax evasion. If Greece did not spend so much, there would not be a need for people to owe so much that they felt they needed to evade their taxes.

Government spending comes before the taxes to pay for the spending. Greece got it's nose stuck in the honey pot. Greece pigged out, big time. The pinnacle of greed...

Government spending is the reason for the taxes, and high taxes are the reason for tax evasion. If Greece did not spend so much, there would not be a need for people to owe so much that they felt they needed to evade their taxes.

Government spending comes before the taxes to pay for the spending. Greece got it's nose stuck in the honey pot. Greece pigged out, big time. The pinnacle of greed...

So if taxes were "reasonable" then people would pay them purely out of a sense of duty, without any external inforcement?

Government spending is the reason for the taxes, and high taxes are the reason for tax evasion. If Greece did not spend so much, there would not be a need for people to owe so much that they felt they needed to evade their taxes.

Government spending comes before the taxes to pay for the spending. Greece got it's nose stuck in the honey pot. Greece pigged out, big time. The pinnacle of greed...

So if taxes were "reasonable" then people would pay them purely out of a sense of duty, without any external inforcement?

Aww, the naivety is just adorable.

Is that a serious question? Okay, here is the answer then...If people feel taxes are reasonable, then yes, they will be far less likely to evade them.If people feel taxes are unreasonable, then yes, people will be far more likely to evade them.